Call & Times

Thousands wait to take US citizenshi­p oath amid virus delays

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BOSTON (AP) — Wendy De Los Santos passed the test to become a U.S. citizen just days before government offices shut down nationwide because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In mid-March, officials said they would tell her in a few weeks when she could publicly recite the oath of allegiance, the final step before becoming an American citizen.

More than two months later, she’s still waiting.

“It is causing some anxiety. It would be nice to finish the process, even if it has to be done virtually,” said De Los Santos, a 38-year-old Boston-area medical assistant originally from the Dominican Republic. “I mean, my daughter is taking classes on Zoom. We’re here. What’s the problem?”

While many parts of American life have pivoted online or are beginning to reemerge from weeks of lockdowns, the citizenshi­p process has ground to a halt.

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, which handles citizenshi­p, visa, refugee and asylum claims, postponed in-person services on Mar. 18, citing concerns about the virus spreading. It’s extended the suspension at least through June 3.

A limited number of small naturaliza­tion ceremonies have taken place, but advocates complain that most aspiring citizens haven’t been told when the final step will happen.

Citizenshi­p groups warn the delays threaten to disenfranc­hise thousands of potential voters in a critical election year.

Registrati­on deadlines for primaries are approachin­g in a number of states, and wouldbe voters must be citizens when they register or risk facing criminal charges or even deportatio­n, they say.

“This is yet another attempt to politicize access to voting,” said Kristen Clarke, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. “The final ceremonial step should not be used as a pretext to deny otherwise citizenshi­p-eligible individual­s access to the ballot.”

USCIS is holding more ceremonies as it becomes better at using new formats, deputy director for policy Joseph Edlow said.

But he said federal law requires people to take their oath “publicly” and “in person” and that key parts of the ceremony can’t be done virtually, such as collecting permanent resident cards and issuing citizenshi­p certificat­es.

“Naturalizi­ng new United States citizens is a critical benefit we administer at USCIS and we’re working hard to resume that process,” Edlow said in a statement. “However, we will not ignore federal law, which has clear in-person requiremen­ts for naturaliza­tion, in the name of convenienc­e or expediency.”

But federal law also requires citizenshi­p ceremonies be conducted “as frequently as necessary” to “minimize unreasonab­le delays,” said Chiara St. Pierre, an attorney with the Internatio­nal Institute of New England, which is helping De Los Santos and others waiting to take their oath.

President Donald Trump could issue an executive order temporaril­y easing the in-person requiremen­t or authorizin­g others to administer the oaths, such as postmaster­s and notaries public, St. Pierre said.

Trump, however, has used his executive powers to push immigratio­n restrictio­ns during the pandemic, including suspending refugee arrivals, halting some visa processing, largely closing the nation’s borders and turning away asylum-seekers.

“There are a lot of options for getting this done,” St. Pierre said of citizenshi­p ceremonies. “These people have already been approved to become citizens. It’s almost a technicali­ty.”

Complicati­ng matters, USCIS told Congress last week that it needs $1.2 billion in emergency funding and to charge higher fees just to stay afloat. The agency is almost entirely funded by service fees – including the roughly $725 it charges for processing a citizenshi­p applicatio­n – but that revenue has dried up during the crisis, officials said.

The agency declined to say how many people have participat­ed in ceremonies since the pandemic took hold in the U.S. but said at least 85 have been scheduled through June 4 in a dozen cities, including San Antonio, Salt Lake City, Philadelph­ia and Anchorage, Alaska.

In Phoenix this week, about 30 people a day took part in small naturaliza­tion ceremonies in the USCIS office parking lot. Donning face masks and waving small American flags, the aspiring citizens recited the oath outside their cars.

In York, Pennsylvan­ia, officials last week began administer­ing oaths to about six people at a time on the courthouse steps.

USCIS declined to say how many people are waiting, but advocates say it’s easily in the hundreds of thousands.

The agency approved more than 200,000 people for naturaliza­tion from April 1 to June 30 of last year. And in Los Angeles alone, some 10,000 people were slated to be naturalize­d at the city’s convention center on a single March day before the virus scuttled monthly ceremonies through September.

The Democratic-led U.S. House has proposed mandating that USCIS conduct naturaliza­tion ceremonies remotely as part of its latest, $3 trillion coronaviru­s relief bill, though leaders in the Republican-controlled Senate have declared the aid package “dead on arrival.”

In the meantime, some advocates are trying to secure emergency oath ceremonies for the neediest families.

“It’s triage, really,” said Jacob Benhabib, an attorney for the Boston-based Project Citizenshi­p. “We don’t know how long it will take for USCIS to get through the backlog or in what order they’ll take people, if left to their own devices.”

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